Thank you, Joshua, and good morning, everyone. This has been an unprecedented year, one that has demonstrated the incredible resilience of doctors, nurses and other health care professionals on the front lines of the global fight against Covid-19. The resolve and speed with which the potential lifesaving therapies and vaccines are being developed remind us daily of why we are exceedingly proud to be part of the life science industry. Despite the many external challenges this year, we have made significant progress against our clinical objectives in our ocular disease programs, our lead candidate reproxalap continue to advance toward NDA submission in dry eye disease and allergic conjunctivitis, two of the world's most common ocular surface conditions affecting more than 100 million patients in the United States alone. This quarter we're on track to initiate a randomized double-masked parallel-group Phase 3 clinical trial to assess the activity of reproxalap and an objective sign endpoint of dry eye disease. Consistent with prior guidance and subject to finalization of trial design, the 28-day pivotal trial will measure the effect of reproxalap on tear RASP levels after single and multiple doses of drugs. The trial will include exposure to a controlled environment chamber to assess the effect of acute changes in dryness on a range of objective signs, including tear RASP levels, ocular redness and Schirmer score. The purpose of the chamber is to exacerbate dry eye disease signs and symptoms with low humidity, high airflow and forced visual tasking. Importantly, we have previously tested the activity of reproxalap in an allergen chamber in which reproxalap demonstrated acute improvement in ocular itching and redness almost immediately after drug dosing. The Phase 3 trial will include a 20 patient run in phase with 10 drug treated patients and 10 vehicle treated patients. The run in phase is expected to be completed by year end. To confirm the accuracy and applicability of RASP assay methods, we recently initiated a natural history study in which we collected tear samples from approximately 20 dry eye disease patients. In the coming weeks we plan in vitro analyses of the tear RASP levels at baseline and following exposure to drugs or vehicle. Per standard NDA submission requirements, a separate safety study of reproxalap in dry disease patients is on schedule to begin next month. From a safety perspective reproxalap has been evaluated in more than 1,100 patients with no observed safety concerns. Overall, we remain on track to file an NDA submission in dry disease by the end of 2021. Importantly, all of our expected timelines are subject to a number of factors, including finalization of trial design, completion of assay development, positive clinical results, regulatory review, potential disruptions due to Covid-19 and other factors that may not be in our control. Enrolment has restarted in the Phase 3 INVIGORATE trial of reproxalap in patients with allergic conjunctivitis. As a reminder, INVIGORATE is being conducted in an allergen chamber and trial initiation was paused in the second quarter to avoid the confounding effects of environmental pollen during what was an unusually early and extended allergy season in the beginning of the year. INVIGORATE is a randomized double-masked crossover vehicle controlled Phase 3 clinical trial, with a planned enrolment of approximately 126 patients. Consistent with prior allergic conjunctivitis trials the primary endpoint will be subject reported ocular itching score. Top-line results are expected in the first half of 2021 and NDA submission is expected by the end of next year pending positive results and regulatory review. Over Phase 2A, Phase 2B and Phase 3 trials, reproxalap has consistently demonstrated a uniquely durable response that likely outlast that of standard of care antihistamines. In addition to durability, the rapid onset of response will be highlighted in a poster presentation next week at the American Academy of Ophthalmology 2020 virtual annual meeting. The poster features new data from responder analyses of our Phase 2 allergen chamber trials, as well as new data on ocular tearing and post chamber activity of drug after exposure to allergen has ceased. The data further support the clinical utility of reproxalap suggesting the possibility of rapid efficacy in reducing redness and itching in allergic conjunctivitis. For these reasons, we remain particularly excited about the potential of reproxalap as the first novel mechanistic approach for late stage allergic conjunctivitis in decades. Turning to the posterior segment of our ocular disease pipeline, we expect to complete enrolment in part one of the Phase 3 GUARD trial of ADX 2191 for the prevention of recurrent retinal detachment due to proliferative vitreoretinopathy or PVR by the end of 2021. PVR is the leading cause of retinal detachment surgery failure affecting roughly 4,000 patients per year in the United States and nearly twice as many in Europe and Japan combined. Recruitment for the GUARD trial is underway at more than 20 clinical sites across the United States and as I noted in our Q2 call, the pace of enrolment has been slower than anticipated particularly due to delays caused by Covid-19. ADX 2191 may also have the potential to treat Primary Vitreoretinal Lymphoma or PVRL, a rare, aggressive high grade cancer that affects approximately 2,900 people in the United States, with about 600 new cases diagnosed annually. There are no approved treatments for this severe type of ocular cancer. As for our systemic disease programs, in September, we received a study may proceed letter from the FDA clearing the way to start Phase 2 testing of ADX 629 our orally available RASP inhibitor for the treatment of adult patients hospitalized for Covid-19. We continue to expect the trial to begin by year end. This quarter we also plan to initiate Phase 2 clinical trials of ADX 629 for the treatment of severe inflammation associated with TH2 types cytokine production represented by atopic asthma and TH1 type cytokine production represented by psoriasis. As I noted on our Q2 call, testing in an animal model of cytokine storm suggested that RASP inhibitors have the potential to act as immunological switches that may broadly modulate immune systems from pro inflammatory states to anti-inflammatory states. Target engagement of ADX 629 was confirmed in our Phase 1 clinical trial, in which reduction in the commonly described pro inflammatory RASP malondialdehyde was observed in treated subjects. ADX 629 was well tolerated and no treatment related adverse events were observed in the trial. We head into the final two months of the year in excellent financial condition. Based on current operating plans we believe we are well capitalized and expect our cash runway to fund operations through 2022, including potential NDA submissions for reproxalap in dry disease and allergic conjunctivitis, assuming positive clinical trial results and regulatory review. Now, I'll turn the call over to Joshua for the third quarter financial review.